How Writing Can Help You Lead with Courage in an Uncertain World
What ChatGPT Can't Provide: Clarity. Conviction. Well-Being
Introducing Lead With Words, my latest workshop for mission-driven leaders. It offers strategies for using writing to enhance clarity, conviction, and well-being—all of which are vital for people focused on leading with courage on mission-critical goals. Video clip below. Learn more.
One big challenge for leaders and all changemakers today is finding a way to be heard. This is true whether you lead a team, a family, or a classroom.
The voices competing for attention are mighty and getting more voluminous by the day.
There is also the triggering effect of hot-button issues. Whether it’s the environment, economy, politics, technology, healthcare, immigration, education, or war, topics like these often trigger fear in the listener. And fear creates roadblocks that leaders must find skillful ways to navigate.
However, in efforts to drive missions forward through the power of words, one critically important opportunity is often overlooked, especially in these days of generative AI: namely, the benefit of writing to the leader themself.
Cultivating clarity and conviction are two benefits of writing. Less well-known are the health and emotional benefits that can be welcomed during these stressful times.
All of this is true whether or not you are comfortable with writing, which I’ll get to.
The Clarity Connection
Many famous authors have spoken of the power of clarity that comes from writing (which doesn’t have to be made public to serve you.)
Joan Didion, for example, wrote: “I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.” Similar sentiments have been attributed to E. L. Doctorow, William Faulker, E. M. Forster, Stephen King, and Flannery O’Connor.
The Strengthening of Conviction
You can also see evidence of how writing fuels the power of conviction in the stories of some of the most influential leaders in history.
The great abolitionist Frederick Douglass, who taught himself to read and write, clearly understood the power of using his own story to drive change. He did this through the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass and speeches that helped shift public opinion on slavery.
But importantly, Douglass also used writing to strengthen his thinking and conviction.
“Douglass recognized that to make a big impact, he had to create his own moral, intellectual, and emotional infrastructure,” the Harvard Business School historian Nancy Koehn writes In Forged in Crisis: The Making of Five Courageous Leaders.
“We can imagine it as a series of conversations he had with himself as he considered how he might affect broader events,” she continues. “These internal discussions formed the cornerstone of Douglass’s leadership, helping him make day-to-day choices, communicate his mission, and navigate through moments of doubt and despair.”
Koehn’s conclusion: “All individuals who aspire to lead effectively must build their own foundation.”
The Health Benefits
Finally, research studies show that writing about stressful, emotional, or traumatic events significantly improves physical and psychological health.
These improvements resulted from writing for as little as 15 to 20 minutes on three to five occasions, according to a 2018 study published by Cambridge University Press.
Your Comfort With Writing?
As I mentioned in the video clip from a recent workshop, I long struggled with self-doubt about my writing. So have most of the clients I have worked with. It comes with the territory.
But working through this has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. And I love to help others do the same – not only because of the clarity, conviction, and health benefits discussed here. I love incorporating writing into the journey of leading with courage because I know the confidence and joy it brings, which anyone working on essential issues in our uncertain world deserves.
Please reach out if your curiosity is piqued. I offer talks, workshops, and coaching.
This matches my experience of writing Lisa. The value for me is less about the output and more about the process. Powerful piece.
Thank you, @PennyTerry! It is fascinating how the inner work can fuel the outer—at least for the introverts like me.😉